The Perils Of Privatisation - Part X
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No best answer has yet been selected by davidardill. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As the success of 'Friends Reunited' shows, the rosy glasses of nostalgia are something we all wear - esepcially if we've had a bad time in an other relationship.
What you want is to recapture the love you had then, the wonderful feelings you remember, and the hope that it will extinguish the pain you carry from the break-up.
The brutal truth is, this feeling is not real. You are different, and so is she - as a result of the lives you have led in the intervevning time. She looks like the woman you loved, she sounds, and smells and probably even tastes the same, but she is not the same person, and neither are you.
You may experience initial euphoria, followed by a hollow let-down feeling, if you were to resume your relationship.
dcannon has it absolutely right - move on, but never forget - this woman is a part of what makes you who you are now, but she did it by being in your life then - and you can't go back.
David, it sounds to me like it is over and that you might want to just move on, especially if she has made it clear that she wishes nothing to do with you.
However, I do want to share this. My wife and I dated for a few years and finally broke up. It was right for us to break up at that time. We were not a fit for eachother. However, two years went by and I dated other women. During that time, I realised I was constantly comparing them to her and accepted that she really had been the best girl I'd ever met.
A mutual friend of ours whom we had know for many years had a very large party at her country estate and invited both of us to attend - and we did not know the other would be there. I was standing on the lawn where the automobiles were parked, just talking with some of the men before going into the party. A car pulled up, she got out of the passenger side, and her friend who drive cheerfully called my name. My ex and I were both horrified, but polite to eachother, and talked for a moment. The moment turned into hours, and we never went inside to the party.
We dated, took our time, and discovered that being apart was the best thing for us. That was late 1997. We married in 1999 and I am still very glad we got back together.
I cannot tell from your information if this is something you should do or not. But I can tell you in my case, I am glad our mutual friend knew that we were right for eachother and set up this encounter. I just thought I would let you know that on occasion, it might be possible for things to work out just fine.
Best of luck to you in making the right decisions.
Despite the initial break-up hitting me like a express train in the short term, when I was 16, I got over it all and have lived a fulfilling life since and it has never held me back from doing anything. I have been in other relationships and the only reason we got close again was because she told me she still loved me from our 'childhood' romance. When things were going well between us again and I began realising how much I felt for her, she slammed the door, metaphorically, in my face and refused to talk to me again.
Even now I don't expect to get back into a relationship with her, I have learned not to expect such fairytale and logical conclusions in matters of love, maybe it was the passion, or the fact that it was my first encounter with such deep feelings, but no other relationship has ever come close to recreating such an effect on my heart and soul.
I do think about her everyday and I'll never forget her. I am happy with my life and things are positive, but the niggling feeling always takes me back to her.
It is that niggling that makes me think it must be more special than any other relationship. By rights I should hate her for freezing me out of her life - for whatever reason - and condemning even our friendship to the scrapheap, but there is something that draws me back.
I'm still only 21, I don't know what real love is, maybe it's the contrast that makes me think it is more than it really is - my only other major relationship was one full of bitterness, jealousy and argument and I left lucky for my life to be intactm, so perhaps I am comparing the two and remembering fondly the time when I actually felt 'in love'.
It sounds like this was a soulmate relationship. These are always more intense and there is always a strong 'pull' to the person, almost like a physical cord linking you. Soulmates are always our teachers and there are always lessons to be learned, there is usually some karma to be worked through, and there can be periods of separation and drawing back together. This is obviously difficult for you and painful too. You sound like a caring and loving person with a lot to offer and I am certain you will meet someone, it would be much better if, when that happens you are detached from this person completely. Love and light Amara x
David, some of the way you define of love will change as you grow older, of course. Your definition as a child is vastly different from your definition today, and this will continue to evolve. But the central part of love is what hits your heart and sticks to it. I am married with children, and a good deal older than you, and I absolutely adore my wife. So even when we have a fight, that love stays tethered to the heart and does not let go, even if I sleep on the couch mad. That type of love has a bit of patina to it, and by that I mean it is aged nicely and much better as a result. A few scars here and there, but better than it was before.
You may be feeling that kind of love, or perhaps its predecessor. That is something you have to decide.
Nevertheless, even should you identify this niggling in your heart as that type of love that grows and stays in place, it does not guarantee that she will return those feelings. She might at a later date, as happened in my case. But you never know.
Alright, then. Now let's go have a pint. Cheers!
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